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The answer depends on how you side with a declaration from Merriam-Webster: "It is permissible in English for a preposition to be what you end a sentence with," the dictionary publisher said in a ...
It’s a great story, but it’s a myth. And so is that so-called grammar rule about ending sentences with prepositions. If that previous sentence bugs you, by the way, you’ve bought into ...
That is not all. Both Churchill and de la Rosa happen also to possess a kindred penchant to end sentences with a preposition hilariously, a practice which according to the traditional grammar ...
Because I missed the bus. Many students are taught it’s unacceptable to end a sentence with a preposition—words like “on,” “from,” “for,” “by,” above,” “over”—but that ...